
James Risen, a reporter for the New York Times, delivered that charge at the "Sources and Secrets" conference at the Times Center. He spoke from personal experience, having felt the sting of the administration's use of the Espionage Act to compel reporters to betray their confidential sources. Mr. Risen's 2006 book, "State of War," used confidential sources at the CIA to tell how the agency botched efforts to stop Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons. Spies and undercover men do not like it when their screw-ups become the stuff of common knowledge.
Mr. Obama has dispatched his team of lawyers to destroy the legal concept of a reporter's privilege, all to identify and punish the insider who leaked the goods to Mr. Risen. The administration argues that Mr. Risen must betray his word and identify anyone who let the public know what their government is doing. Unless the Supreme Court takes up Mr. Risen's appeal, he'll have to talk or go to jail.
It's not that the White House really wants Mr. Risen to serve time and to make sure he does, the mere threat is enough. Witch hunts to "find the leaks" are meant to deliver a chilling message throughout the bureaucracy: "Talk to a reporter, and we'll unleash the prosecutors." The chill is already spreading through the government.
"This is the worst time period in my career as a journalist for press freedom," says Mr. Risen. "The Obama administration has doubled down on reductions in press freedom that began in the Bush administration, and they are engaged in the kind of aggressive anti-press activities that the Bush administration only contemplated and never pursued."
The use of the Justice Department to prosecute reporters who delve into national security topics creates what Mr. Risen rightly describes as a "de facto Official Secrets Act," referring to the British law that enables government officials to suppress publication of information from leaks.
(Click link below to read more)
READ MORE Sphere: Related Content
No comments:
Post a Comment